AbraCalc

EBITDA: $1M Net Income, $10M Revenue

Model EBITDA for a mid-market company with $1M net income, $200K interest, $400K taxes, $300K depreciation on $10M revenue.

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How to use this tool

  1. Enter net income (or adjusted net income if you want adjusted EBITDA).
  2. Enter interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization for the period.
  3. Enter revenue to compute the EBITDA margin.
  4. Read EBITDA, EBITDA margin, and total D&A.

Mid-market companies with $10M in revenue are commonly valued on EBITDA multiples — typically 5–8x EBITDA for private companies in stable industries.

Frequently asked questions

Why add back interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization?
Interest depends on how a company is financed, taxes depend on jurisdiction, and depreciation and amortization are non-cash accounting allocations. Removing them makes operating profitability more comparable across companies with different debt, tax, and asset profiles.
Is EBITDA the same as cash flow?
No. EBITDA ignores capital expenditure, working-capital changes, and the interest a leveraged company actually pays. It overstates cash generation for asset-heavy businesses, so use it as a comparability measure, not as free cash flow.
What is a good EBITDA margin?
It is industry-dependent. Software businesses can post very high EBITDA margins, while low-margin retail or distribution runs in the single digits. Compare against sector peers and watch the trend rather than a single absolute target.